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Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, second from left, front row, poses for a photo with K-pop sensation BTS, back row, during a ceremony to appoint the septet as the promotional ambassador to host the 2030 World Expo in the southern port city of Busan at Hybe in Seoul, July 19. Korea Times file |
A lawmaker of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea on Monday proposed a revision bill aimed at allowing decorated pop celebrities, such as K-pop superband BTS, to replace their military duties with alternative service.
The bill, the fourth of its kind, mandates pop celebrities, who have received an order of merit from the government, should be given a chance to apply for alternative military service.
Under the current Military Service Act, military service exemptions are given only to international award-winning athletes and classical musicians for their roles in elevating the country's reputation overseas.
All able-bodied South Korean men between the ages of 18 and 28 must carry out compulsory military service for about two years in a country that faces North Korea across a heavily fortified border.
If the bill is passed, BTS members can replace their compulsory military duty with alternative service, as they have received an order of cultural merit in 2018.
"Korean pop celebrities active in the international field make unimaginable economic and social contributions," Rep. Kim Young-bae, who proposed the bill, said.
"I believe pop celebrities will make important contributions to the national interest, including promoting a bid to host the 2030 World Expo in Busan, through doing alternative military service," Kim added.
In July, BTS was appointed as a public relations ambassador for Korea's expo bid.
According to a Realmeter poll conducted last week, more than 60 percent of Koreans approved of revising a bill to allow alternative military service for prominent pop celebrities. (Yonhap)